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  • 11
    Sep
    2012
    9:09am, EDT

    Obama: Hitting Romney on national security

    Politico notes how the Obama campaign has been hitting Romney on national security – hard. “Romney — whose convention speech didn’t include a salute to the troops or a reference to Afghanistan, where about 75,000 Americans are still at war — is getting hit almost daily now by Democratic attacks that he is wobbly and therefore untrustworthy on national security. It’s the same critique Republicans used to undermine Kerry to devastating effect eight years ago — and the Obama campaign plans to use the run-up to the presidential debates to make a major issue of Romney’s surprising convention stumble.”

    21 comments

    benLaden and Kadaffi are dead, that is a very good national security plan for me.

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  • 2
    Sep
    2012
    1:52pm, EDT

    Biden blasts Romney on foreign policy

    By NBC's Carrie Dann

    YORK, Pa. -- Vice President Joe Biden today slammed Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney for calling the Iraq and Afghanistan troop drawdowns "a mistake" and said the GOP nominee is "ready to go to war" in Syria and Iran. 

    "Listen to what he says about foreign policy. You caught some of it in his [convention] speech," Biden told a crowd of over a 1,000 at a Pennsylvania high school. "He said it was a mistake to end the war in Iraq and bring all of our warriors home."

    Biden added, "He said it was a mistake to set an end date for our warriors in Afghanistan and bring them home. He implies by the speech that he's ready to go to war in Syria and Iran. He wants to move from cooperation to confrontation with Putin's Russia." 

    While Romney has opposed the administration's strategy of timetabled troop exits for both wars, he did not address either conflict in his convention speech. Democrats have skewered Romney for failing to once mention Iraq or Afghanistan in his remarks to a primetime audience last Thursday night. (The campaign counters that he offered a lengthy foreign policy earlier last week.) 

    Romney did criticize Obama's policies towards Iran and Russia during his convention speech, saying "under my administration ... Mr. Putin will see a little less flexibility and more backbone."
     
    Biden also had harsh words Sunday for his VP counterpart, Rep. Paul Ryan. 

    Mentioning Ryan's statement last week that "The truest measure of any society is how it treats those who cannot defend or care for themselves," Biden listed off education and health initiatives that he says would be cut under the Romney-Ryan plan. 

    "I'd like to change the quote of my distinguished colleague, Congressman Ryan," he said. "I think the truest measure of a *political party* is how it treats those who cannot defend or care for themselves. And by that standard, it's no contest." 

    *** UPDATE *** The Romney campaign issued this response, although it didn't include a mention about foreign policy: “Just today, President Obama’s own surrogates admitted that we are not better off than we were four years ago. It’s clear that we need to move in a different direction, but Vice President Biden only brought the same failed policies and tired attacks to Pennsylvania that have not turned around our economy or helped the middle class. Mitt Romney and Paul Ryan have a plan for a stronger middle class that will bring back jobs and jumpstart the economy.” 

    96 comments

    "Mitt Romney and Paul Ryan have a plan for a stronger middle class that will bring back jobs and jumpstart the economy.” The Romney-Ryan secret plan is to talk about a plan and nothing more. If they have such a great plan, why don't they talk about it? Which leads me to believe:

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  • 21
    Aug
    2012
    6:09pm, EDT

    Ryan charges Obama with putting defense jobs at risk

    By NBC's Alex Moe
    Follow @AlexNBCNews

     

    WEST CHESTER, PA -- Presumptive Republican vice presidential nominee Paul Ryan blamed President Barack Obama for putting “almost 44,000 jobs at stake” here in Pennsylvania because of the looming defense cuts.

    Speaking outside the American Helicopter Museum & Education Center, Ryan argued that under the Obama administration, “you either lose defense jobs in Pennsylvania or put small businesses further in a competitive disadvantage to compete in the global economy and lose small business jobs.”

    "I’ve got a good idea – why don’t we take away President Obama’s job and create jobs for everybody no matter what industry they are in. That’s a good stimulus project," Ryan said.

    Ryan, the chairman of the House Budget Committee, voted for the debt ceiling deal last summer, which included the sequestration of defense spending.

    In the year since then, Ryan has joined other House Republicans in passing legislation to put off those defense cuts by finding savings elsewhere. However, the Obama administration has rejected these calling it an unbalanced package since it would rely on cuts elsewhere, rather than include a mix of tax hikes. The president has vowed to veto any attempt to undo the sequester.

    The Wisconsin congressman, who made his Pennsylvania debut today on the stump, first talked about sequestration -- the pending $500 billion in defense cuts -- on the campaign trail in Virginia on Aug. 17.

    Both Virginia and Pennsylvania have a heavy military presence in their states.

    Ryan declared here just outside of Philadelphia: “national defense is the first priority of the federal government.”

    The seven-term congressman has had his national security credentials called into question since being announced as VP as he typically deals with domestic issues.

    However, in an interview with Fox News’ Sean Hannity that will air this evening, Ryan said he believes he has more experience with foreign policy than President Obama did when he took office in 2008.

    “Well, most of the traveling I’ve done throughout my 14 years in Congress has been to the Middle East. You know, I’ve had men and women to war on more than one occasion. I’ve been to those funerals. I’ve talked to the widows and the wives and the parents. I’ve gone to Afghanistan and Iraq to meet with our troops, to learn from them. Obviously, I have a lot more experience than Barack Obama did when he became president. But if you take a look at our current posture, President Obama is quote-unquote, “leading from behind,” Ryan said.

    93 comments

    Let's see... So far today, Paulie has been clinging to his guns, God & Joe the Plumber, makes total sense to whip out the fear card! This idiot reminds me of Palin in pants!

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  • 30
    Jul
    2012
    6:12pm, EDT

    Sen. Graham: Contractors should issue layoff notices before election

    By NBC's Jamie Novogrod
    Follow @JamieNBCNews

     

    TAMPA, Fla. -- South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham (R) called on government contractors to put employees on layoff notice before November's election as a way to pressure Congress to address the so-called "fiscal cliff."

    Graham, joined by Republican Sens. John McCain (AZ) and Kelly Ayotte (NH), were in Florida for their first stop on a  two-day, four-state tour by these three members of the Senate Armed Services Committee designed to bring attention to the $500 billion in automatic cuts scheduled to begin in January if Congress does not find other ways to cut spending.

    “Politicians, you know, quite frankly respond to pressure,” Graham said about the  cuts set to begin in 2013 under the so-called sequestration budget.

    “I’m urging every defense industry that could be affected by sequestration to put your employees on notice before November,” he continued. “The more it becomes real to us as to what comes the nation’s way, the more likely we are to solve the problem.”

    Graham delivered the remarks inside a University of South Florida auditorium here in Tampa this morning to an audience of military veterans, academics, and defense contractors.

    Some in the audience were linked to nearby MacDill Air Force base, a sprawling installation housing the U.S. Central Command, the organization that oversees America’s military activity in the Middle East, including Iraq and Afghanistan.

    “There is gridlock in Washington,” McCain said as he warmed the crowd shortly after taking the podium. “I don’t need to tell you that.  It’s hard these days, trying to do the Lord’s work in the city of Satan.”

    The line won laughs, but much of the humor today was strictly of the gallows variety.

    Before the event began, audience members mingled and expressed satisfaction that South Florida’s defense industry was being recognized.

    “I think they’re playing politics with peoples’ lives,” Donna S. Huneycutt, the executive vice president of a small government consulting firm, said of Congress in an interview. 

    Huneycutt said she has a staff of 62 people, and nearly had to lay people off last year as a result of earlier budget cuts.

    “I’d like to see both sides come to the table and compromise,” she said.

    McCain, Graham, and Ayotte called for a bipartisan solution to the crisis.

    They signaled they would break with other Republicans and would accept closing loopholes in the tax code in return for concessions from Democrats, including cuts to entitlement programs.

    “We shouldn’t put our troops in this position,” Ayotte said. “We shouldn’t put our military feeling like they have the sword of Damocles hanging over their head.”

    Ayotte, the wife of a retired Air National Guard pilot who flew combat missions over Iraq, is a buzzed-about prospect for the number-two slot on presumptive Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney’s ticket and is rumored to be on his short list.

    The town hall tour was scheduled to make stops later today in Fayetteville, NC and Norfolk, VA – also home to key military communities.

    The tour will wrap Tuesday morning in Merrimack, NH at a facility for the defense contractor BAE Systems.

    93 comments

    More fear mongering accompanied by the obligatory scary music! You really have to laugh at these clowns who only work 9 days a month talking about 'lay-off's'... Is this their solution to the J-O-B creation they ran on in 2010?

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  • 5
    Jun
    2012
    3:54pm, EDT

    White House confirms Al Qaeda leader's death

    By NBC's Shawna Thomas

    The White House confirmed today that deputy Al Qaeda leader Abu Yahya al-Libi is dead, and called it a “major blow” to the group.

    However, White House Press Secretary Jay Carney offered no details on how his death was brought about and avoided other questions about the CIA’s controversial drone program.

    Carney said al-Libi's death is "part of the...degradation that has taken place to core Al Qaeda during the past several years.”

    Earlier today NBC's Jim Miklaszewski confirmed that al-Libi was killed in a weekend drone strike in Pakistan. 

    59 comments

    Let's see - what was it Mitt Romney said at AIPAC a couple months ago? "Hope is not a foreign policy,” he added. “The only thing respected by thugs and tyrants is our resolve, backed by our power and our readiness to use it.” And what was Romney's foreign policy plan again? "I will …

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  • 30
    Apr
    2012
    12:09pm, EDT

    Would bin Laden be alive under President Romney?

    The participants pictured in the famous photo of the White House Situation Room taken during the raid on Osama bin Laden's compound speak with NBC's Brian Williams.

    By Michael O'Brien

     

    Follow @mpoindc

     

    Would Mitt Romney have given the order to authorize the daring mission that ended in Osama bin Laden’s assassination?

    It’s impossible to say, but that hasn’t stopped President Barack Obama’s campaign from stoking doubts that a President Romney, essentially, wouldn’t have had the guts to make that order.

    “Thanks to President Obama, bin Laden is dead and General Motors is alive,” Vice President Joe Biden said Thursday in a campaign speech. “You have to ask yourself, if Gov. Romney had been president, could he have used the same slogan – in reverse? “

    Jason Cohn / Reuters

    Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney addresses supporters at a rally at Consol Energy's Research and Development facility outside Pittsburgh, Pa.

    Marking the one-year anniversary of the mission that successfully killed bin Laden, the mastermind behind the Sept. 11, 2011 terror attacks, has undoubtedly given the Obama campaign an opportunity to remind voters of one of the president’s biggest accomplishments on foreign policy and national security.

    “He took the harder and more honorable path, and the one that produced, in my opinion, the best result,” former President Bill Clinton said in a web video released Friday by the Obama campaign – one that directly asks the question about what Romney would have done if he were in that position last year.

    But some Republicans are crying foul. For starters, the Republican National Committee was eager to highlight the 2008 Obama campaign’s own complaint against then-rival Hillary Clinton, accusing her of trying to “invoke bin Laden to score political points” by depicting the infamous al-Qaida leader in a campaign ad.

    “I think it's irresponsible and unfair,” said Brian Hook, a foreign policy adviser to both President George W. Bush and former White House hopeful Tim Pawlenty, said of the Obama campaign’s questioning of Romney. “What person running for commander in chief doesn't want to bring bin Laden to justice?”

    “In my experience, every president will try to do the right thing,” said Charles Hill, a conservative foreign policy expert and lecturer at Yale University.  “You can't say one person would do it and another person wouldn't; it depends on the operational plan.”

    And Sen. John McCain, the 2008 GOP nominee and ranking member of the Armed Services Committee, protested in a statement: "No one disputes that the President deserves credit for ordering the raid, but to politicize it in this way is the height of hypocrisy. The Obama campaign asks whether Mitt Romney would have made that decision. Of course they want to focus on this one tactical decision because the other decisions this president has made have harmed our national security."

    By most press accounts, the decision to authorize the mission that killed bin Laden was fraught with difficulties; there was no “slam-dunk” guarantees that the risky strike would end with success. Biden himself has said that he had counseled the president against the Special Forces mission.

    The Obama campaign’s effort to translate that decision into a political chit is two-fold. First, they’re looking to build up the president’s stature as a commander in chief, and their efforts are meant to cast Obama as a figure of fortitude in the face of Republican criticism that he’s too weak.

    The other prong – and this is where the claim that Romney wouldn’t have acted comes into play – is intended to seize on the instances in which the former Massachusetts governor’s foreign policy positions have seemed muddled or, worse, inconsistent.

    Political strategist Ed Gillespie lambasts the Obama campaign's use of Osama bin Laden's killing as a political tool.

    The crux of that argument stems from comments Romney made in 2007 when, in reference to bin Laden, Romney said “it’s not worth moving heaven and earth and spending billions of dollars just trying to catch one person.”

    That comment, said former Gen. Wesley Clark, a onetime Democratic presidential candidate and surrogate for the Obama campaign, made it fair to question whether a Romney presidency would have ended in the same outcome of killing bin Laden.

    Clark argued that Obama deserves credit not just for ordering the mission, but for initiating an overall shift in strategy that helped collect the actionable intelligence that allowed the president to make the call he did.

    “It’s not quite a fair comparison to say Gov. Romney might have decided to go after him, too, if he had that information,” Clark said. “But that information is the result of thousands of man hours of effort at the exclusion of not focusing on other things. The decision was just one step of many that led to the takedown of Osama bin Laden.”

    Rudy deLeon, a senior vice president of national security and international policy at Washington’s Center for American Progress, concurred.

    “You had actionable intelligence, which is something the president doesn't always get. But in swinging the forces from Iraq to Afghanistan, you were able to swing with it the kind of surveillance that was able to get you actionable intelligence,” he said, referencing the surge in troops in Afghanistan that Obama had authorized.

    Former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Admiral Mike Mullen tells NBC's Brian Williams he worries 'a great deal' that the Osama bin Laden raid will be spun into election politics.

    “He basically took on his own party. That's not a sign of weakness or indifference,” deLeon added.

    Hook cautioned, though, against overly politicizing the bin Laden mission, referencing the instance in which Obama said he was wary of appearing to “spike the football,” referring to the photos of a dead bin Laden.

    “Didn't Obama say we shouldn't be spiking the ball in the end zone?” Hook asked. “Well, isn't this spiking the ball in the end zone?”

    546 comments

    Would bin Laden be alive under President Romney?

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  • 29
    Mar
    2012
    11:13pm, EDT

    Santorum outlines foreign policy, slams Romney ad, at Jelly Belly plant

    By NBC's Andrew Rafferty
    Follow @AndrewNBCNews

     

    FAIRFIELD, Calif. -- Rick Santorum delivered what was billed as a major foreign policy speech at One Jelly Belly Lane in his latest in a series of attempts to invoke images of conservative icon Ronald Reagan.

    Speaking to a crowd gathered at Jelly Belly Candy Company here, the candy manufacturers who produced Reagan's beloved jelly beans, Santorum's policy address was part homage to the former president and part blazing critique of his chief rival for the GOP nomination, Mitt Romney.

    A picture of Reagan's face made out of jelly beans hung outside on the room where the former Pennsylvania senator told supporters the spirit of the Great Communicator had been lost.  Santorum was not shy about citing Romney as an example of a politician who does not fit the Reagan mold.  Santorum said Romney's inconsistencies on issues like gay marriage and abortion rights.

    "We as conservatives need to stand up and fight for a candidate that can win this general election, who stands solidly, firmly on the 3 legs of the stool that brought the Reagan coalition together," Santorum said, referring to Reagan's belief in free enterprise, strong national defense, and conservative social values.

    But it is an ad in Wisconsin which Santorum says paints him as an abortion rights advocate that GOP hopeful seemed particularly bothered by.

    "I find it sort of remarkable that Gov. Romney is out running ads in Wisconsin right now basically saying I'm not pro-life," Santorum said, following with a list of the anti-abortion rights legislation he help push in Congress.  "To suggest somehow or another that I am not pro-life, again, is a disingenuous game that is played by politicians who seek power instead of trying to be truthful to the American public," he said.

    Santorum laid out a national security platform based in strengthening the U.S. relationship with its allies and holding other countries accountable, two things he criticized Obama for failing to have done.

    "If you are a foe of the United States, and you do not respect the United States and our security interests, you will learn to fear the United States and your security interests," he said to applause.  "Of all of the failings of this president, perhaps the greatest is on national security.  And folks that’s saying something."

    Visiting California meant a break from campaigning in Wisconsin, where polls showed Santorum struggling to keep pace with Romney.  And yesterday, more bad news as Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL) gave his much anticipated endorsement to Romney.

    "If an endorsement hurt me, I wouldn't be here," Santorum said while greeting voters after the event.

    The candy company was Santorum's only campaign event in the Golden State, which holds its primary June 5.  He spent the earlier part of the day fundraising in the Los Angeles area.  And despite their late primary, the GOP hopeful seemed confident the state would be important this cycle.

    "California doesn't get a chance very much to play in presidential politics, of late," he said.  "But you will in this presidential primary."

    75 comments

    Wow, Santorum, I'd say that Obama's foreign policy has been at the top of the game. Or did you forget Reagan's shameful retreat from Lebanon? One thing for sure, the Republicans have never seen a country they didn't want to fight.

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  • 5
    Mar
    2012
    4:21pm, EST

    McCain calls for airstrikes in Syria

    By NBC's Frank Thorp
    Follow @FrankThorpNBC

     

    Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) called for U.S.-led airstrikes against government forces in Syria on Monday, the first such call from the top Republican on the Senate Armed Services Committee. 

    "The United States should lead an international effort to protect key population centers in Syria, especially in the north, through airstrikes on Assad's forces," McCain said in a speech on the Senate floor this afternoon.

    According to McCain, the US-led airstrikes would be done with the goal of establishing and defending safe havens in the north of Syria, which would provide opposition forces a base to plan further military operations.

    The call from McCain comes just a day after Republican Presidential Nominee Mitt Romney said he was "not anxious to employ military action" involving Syria, but said the country should "keep our options open."

    McCain admitted that public sentiment in the country is against more foreign military involvement after two exhausting wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, but says that the US has a responsibility to step in to lead international opposition to the Assad regime.

    "If Assad manages to cling to power -- or even if he manages to sustain his slaughter for months to come, with all of the human and geopolitical costs that entails -- it would be a strategic and moral defeat for the United States. We cannot, we must not, allow this to happen," McCain said.

    70 comments

    McCain was one of the GOPers who said President Obama's UN no-fly zone wasn't good enough and implied we should put troops on the ground in Libya.

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  • 5
    Mar
    2012
    2:04pm, EST

    Obama talks tough toward Iran before meeting with Israeli PM

    By NBC's Ali Weinberg
    Follow @AliNBCNews

     

    Before they began a closed-door, one-on-one meeting, President Obama told Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that the United States “will always have Israel’s back” when it comes to the nation’s security.

    The meeting in the Oval Office, which was to be followed by a lunch, came a day after the president addressed the annual gathering of AIPAC, the largest pro-Israel lobbying group, in which Obama assured the crowd that his policy toward Iran was to prevent it from obtaining a nuclear weapon, not “containment." Obama pointedly refused to rule out using military force to disrupt Iran's nuclear ambitions.

    Obama reiterated that statement today during remarks to the press before his private meeting with Netanyahu.

    “My policy is prevention of Iran obtaining nuclear weapons. And as I indicated yesterday in my speech, when I say all options are at the table, I mean it,” he said.

    The president also said, as he did Sunday, that the United States believes diplomatic efforts still have a chance of effectively dissuading Iran from pursuing nuclear weapons.

    “We do believe that there is still a window that allows for a diplomatic resolution to this issue, but ultimately the Iranians' regime has to make a decision to move in that direction, a decision that they have not made thus far.”

    While Iran’s nuclear aspirations are taking center stage this week, Obama also mentioned the ongoing conflict between Israel and their Palestinian neighbors, saying that he would discuss with Netanyahu the possibility of “a calmer set of discussions” between the two parties.

    “It is a very difficult thing to do in light of the context right now, but I know that the Prime Minister remains committed to trying to achieve that,” he said.

    Netanyahu, whose relationship with Obama was succinctly described by the president as “functional”in an interview last week, thanked Obama for the “strong” speech at AIPAC the day before.

    He emphasized that the security interests of the United States and Israel are intertwined, given that Iran views them both as Western adversaries.

    “For them, you're the Great Satan, we're the Little Satan.  For them, we are you and you're us. And you know something, Mr. President -- at least on this last point, I think they're right. We are you, and you are us. We're together,” Netanyahu said.

    Netanyahu is expected to address AIPAC at the group’s gala event this evening.

    222 comments

    Hold the phone. . . Did not Obama already offer the Iranians the once-in-a-lifetime chance at an actual, one on one, in person, meeting with himself? And did not the Iranians, rather than swoon, simply laugh hysterically at the ego of this moron? Oh, yeah, Obama's doing a great job on Iran.

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  • 5
    Mar
    2012
    9:07am, EST

    Obama agenda: All options on the table

    Obama to AIPAC over the weekend: "Iran's leaders should know that I do not have a policy of containment. I have a policy to prevent Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon. And as I've made clear time and again during the course of my presidency, I will not hesitate to use force when it is necessary to defend the United States and its interests."

    “For Mr. Obama, the speech, before some of Israel’s loudest and staunchest supporters in the United States, was a political high-wire act, an effort to demonstrate his commitment to Israel’s security without signaling American support for a pre-emptive strike against Iran. And it was an effort to confront the Republican presidential candidates who have turned the Iranian nuclear issue into the top item in their litmus test for demonstrating support for Israel,” the New York Times adds.

    The New York Daily News: “The strongly worded speech before the pro-Israel lobby came on the eve of the commander-in-chief's tense White House head-to-head with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who fears a second Holocaust should Tehran get the bomb.”

    The New York Post: “Israel will wait until after the US presidential election in November to bomb Iran’s nuclear plants, under a deal being hashed out by the two allies this past week. President Obama plans to reassure Benjamin Netanyahu tomorrow at the White House that the United States will make sure Iran doesn’t build a nuclear weapon, as long as the Israeli prime minister delays his attack plans, according to a report in The Sunday Times of London.”

    ‘A sense of his soul?’ Vladimir Putin was elected Russia’s president. The New York Daily News: “Czar-in-the-making Vladimir Putin will keep his stranglehold on the Kremlin for another six years. The 59-year-old autocrat was elected president of Russia on Sunday in an election that observers charge was riddled with fraud, intimidation and ballot-box stuffing.”

    The Moscow Times: “Tearful Putin Declares Victory at Rally.”

    A Catholic Cardinal continued to ramp up the rhetoric against Obama and birth control.

    26 comments

    President Obama is a brilliant statesman.

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  • 16
    Feb
    2012
    4:56pm, EST

    Huntsman disagrees with Romney's statements on China

    By NBC's Michelle Perry

    In addition to that OTHER interview on MSNBC's "Andrea Mitchell Reports" today, former presidential candidate Jon Huntsman made some news on the program, saying he disagrees with some of Mitt Romney's statements on China.

    Former US Ambassador Jon Huntsman talks about the complex relationship between the U.S. and China.

    Mitchell: You support Romney. Romney bashes Obama today in op-ed piece on China-is Mitt Romney wrong?

    Huntsman: Well, let's just say that it's not unusual for candidates to be saying certain things about China. I've seen a lot of candidates who later became president who use a lot of rhetoric. It's much easier to talk about China in terms of the fear factor than the opportunity factor. Uh, I would disagree with some of what Gov. Romney has said and it's not surprising that Republicans disagree with each other from time to time. 

    Mitchell: But why support him then?

    Huntsman: Well, you're going to disagree on the issues from time to time. I happen to think that on the economy he's best placed to do what needs to be done in terms of economic development and the creation of jobs. When it comes to China, I think it's wrongheaded when you talk about slapping a tariff on Day 1.

    Mitchell: What about those who say anything to play to audiences and then they have to live with it -- which leads to bad foreign policy choices. What would be your advice to Mitt Romney, Obama, or Rick Santorum?

    Huntsman: Less pandering -- take a step back and analyze with a clear vision. The most complicated, the most challenging, and the most important bilateral relationship we have in the 21st century.  It's not going to be based on sound bites, it's not going to be based on short-term fixes and solutions-it is a long-term play between our people.

    54 comments

    I'd love to say something about this but I am a little busy posthumously circumcising some Mormons.

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  • 2
    Feb
    2012
    9:13am, EST

    Obama agenda: The politics of one page

    There are lots of photos attached to stories today about Obama’s housing policy event yesterday with him holding up his one-page mortgage application form. (Here, here, here.)

    Bloomberg/Business Week: “Obama Uses Housing as Foil to Romney’s ‘Hit Bottom’ Strategy.” “Opponents said the president’s plan, announced yesterday, was as much about politics as the policy goal of easing access to refinancing for homeowners with negative equity. It helps the White House frame differences with Republican presidential candidates and with Congress, which for two straight years has rejected a bank tax that he said would be used to finance the program.”

    National Journal: “President Obama’s housing proposal reflects campaign strategy more than a viable policy agenda, as the administration tries to flip the struggling housing market from economic liability to political asset with a long-shot plan that Chicago can argue is better than the GOP alternative: no plan at all.”

    The Washington Post: “The United States hopes to end its combat mission in Afghanistan by the middle of next year, more than a year earlier than scheduled, Defense Secretary Leon E. Panetta said Wednesday. His remarks reflected a growing sentiment within the Obama administration that its approach to Iraq, where the official end of U.S. combat operations came 16 months before the final U.S. troop withdrawal in December, may provide a useful model for winding down operations in Afghanistan.”

    “President Barack Obama attends the National Prayer Breakfast this morning in Washington, along with the first lady and Vice President Joe Biden,” the AP writes.

    5 comments

    We are just thankful that President Obama is unlike the tea/gop camdidate willard who simply is not concerned about the poor = you know, those American Citizens in need. The GOP-TEA people may not be concerned, but at least our President is, and is doing something about it! Now if only we can stop  …

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Chuck Todd

Chuck Todd became NBC News’ political director in March 2007. He also serves as NBC News' on-air political analyst for "NBC Nightly News with Brian Williams," "Today," "Meet the Press and MSNBC, including "Hardball with Chris Matthews."

Mark Murray

Mark Murray is NBC News' Senior Political Editor. Since joining the network in 2003, he has reported on and written about political races, trends, and issues -- including the 2003 California recall, the 2004 Bush-Kerry presidential race, the 2006 midterm elections, the 2008 presidential contest, the 2010 midterms, and the 2012 presidential race.

Domenico Montanaro

Domenico Montanaro is NBC News' Deputy Political Editor. He writes, reports and edits for First Read, the network's political blog, provides editorial guidance for NBC's broadcast shows and online content, and appears on air. He has covered the 2008 and 2012 presidential elections for NBC and has reported from Capitol Hill.

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